Knuth produced his original Computer Modern fonts using
Metafont, a program that reads stroke-based definitions of glyphs and outputs ready-to-use fonts as bitmap image files. He mostly left the font, as with other components of TeX (with the exception of the TeX and Metafont names themselves, a stipulation Knuth made to maintain
quality control), in the
public domain. The advance of publishing technology (
PostScript,
PDF,
laser printers) has reduced the need for bitmap fonts. The preferred formats are now
outline fonts such as
Type 1,
TrueType, or
OpenType, which can be rendered efficiently at arbitrary resolution and using sophisticated anti-aliasing techniques by printer firmware or on-screen document viewers. Therefore, several other projects have ported the Computer Modern fonts into such formats. Some of these projects have also complemented Computer Modern with • additional characters (euro, accented characters, Cyrillic and Greek script coverage) • different font encodings (to overcome problems with Knuth's original 8-bit character sets) • additional font style variants Several such derivatives are now also widely used and included in
TeX Live, a modern TeX distribution.
CMU A current extended release of the Computer Modern family in the general-purpose
OpenType format is the CMU distribution (for Computer Modern
Unicode): • CMU Serif, the main Computer Modern font family. This includes the four traditional styles of font (regular, italic, bold, bold italic), and: • CMU Serif upright italic, an
upright italic style similar to cursive upright handwriting • CMU Serif bold non-extended, a bold weight duplexed to have the same width as the regular style • CMU Serif roman and bold slanted, two
oblique styles • CMU Classical Serif, an italic design with slightly simpler
serif designs •
Concrete Roman, a
slab serif font in the four standard styles • CMU Typewriter, a typewriter-style slab serif font • CMU Sans Serif, a complementary
sans-serif font, and CMU Bright, a lighter style of the same design • CMU Sans demi-condensed, a condensed style of the same design CMU is released under the
SIL Open Font License.
BlueSky , the font's original purpose Computer Modern was first transformed to a
PostScript Type 3 font format by BlueSky, Inc. in 1988, and then to
Type 1 in 1992 to include
font hinting. The Type 1 version has since then been donated to the
American Mathematical Society (AMS) which distributes them freely under the Open Font License. It is found in most standard TeX distributions.
Latin Modern The Latin Modern implementation, maintained by
Bogusław Jackowski and Janusz M. Nowacki of
TeX User Group Poland (GUST), is now standard in the
TeX community and was made through a
Metafont/
MetaPost derivative called
METATYPE1. It was derived from the BlueSky Type 1 fonts, which were converted back into outline-based METATYPE1 programs, from which then the extended Type 1 and OpenType Latin Modern fonts were developed.
ConTeXt uses Latin Modern as default font, instead of Computer Modern. The Type 1 to METATYPE1 to Type 1 round-trip conversion process involved in the production of the Latin Modern fonts tried to preserve the hinting information of the BlueSky fonts; however, it introduced
rounding errors that affect the quality of the hinting at low pixel sizes. As a result, on-screen display of the Latin Modern fonts can result in a less even display of kerning and character heights than with the BlueSky fonts. The same process was later extended to some free PostScript font clones under the umbrella project
TeX Gyre. The Latin Modern font has also gained an
OpenType math table. Unlike Computer Modern Math, Latin Modern Math has no pairwise kerning information: OpenType math rendering does not make use of this type of kerning, making such information useless.
New Computer Modern The New Computer Modern font family is a large extension in terms of the number of additional glyphs of the Latin Modern fonts which adds support for several more languages such as Greek, Cyrillic, Hebrew, Cherokee and Coptic. This font family comes in three weights, "Regular", "Book", and "Bold". The book weight is supposed to look slightly heavier compared to the "Regular". All three weights include support for typesetting mathematics; complete coverage of Unicode math blocks is provided, along with some more glyphs needed for mathematics. Additionally, the New Computer Modern family includes
sans-serif text and math fonts.
MLModern MLModern is based on the Latin Modern font. It avoids the spindliness of most other Type 1 versions of Computer Modern and hence looks thicker in comparison to Latin Modern or Computer Modern. A visual comparison of Computer Modern, Latin Modern, New Computer Modern Book and MLModern is shown here.
Others • EC fonts – look much like Computer Modern, but have slightly different metrics. These were the first TeX fonts to use the "
Cork encoding" (in
LaTeX also known as T1 encoding) that provides precomposed glyphs for West-European languages. The original EC fonts were only available as Metafont generated bitmaps. • TC fonts – the TeX Companion fonts provide a number of additional symbols commonly used in text. • BaKoMa fonts – another automatically generated Type1 version of Computer Modern by Basil K. Malyshev, dating to 1994. The fonts remain available for download after Malyshev's 2019 death. • CM-super – a very large extension of Computer Modern, available in a variety of encodings. These fonts were automatically vectorized from Computer Modern or EC font bitmaps and therefore lack the hinting information in the BlueSky fonts. • CM-LGC – a Latin, Greek, Cyrillic extension. ==See also==